attractive ways for introduction in school assembly
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Starting with,
Good Morning,
I [Your Name] welcomes all of you in today’s morning assembly hope that you will be fine. Today my topic is [name of your topic] hope that you will listen carefully.
Topic……….
Have a nice day,
Thank you.
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Send postcards.
“I took a picture of me playing fetch with my trusty golden retriever and sent it to each of my new students over the summer. On the back, I wrote a short note introducing myself and telling them how excited I was to have them in my class.” —James Carson, second grade
Share your favorites.
“I print out a list of my top 10 favorite novels and hand them out to my students on the first day of school. That way they get a taste of some of the literature we’ll be reading during the year and get to know a bit about me as well.” —Carla Harris, high school English
Give them a quiz.
“I give kids a fun quiz that says things like ‘Mrs. Scheuer has how many kids? Two, three, nine? Mrs. Scheuer’s favorite restuarant is: Applebees, Red Lobster, Lonnie’s Luncheonette, etc.’ They love when they get them correct.” —Karen Santucci-Scheuer, first grade
Make yourself a star.
“Every week during the year, one student is Star of the Week and they get to display a collage of their favorite things in the classroom. For the first week, I’m the star and my collage allows my students to get to know me.” —Judith Garcia, kindergarten
Let them piece it together.
“I give students a stack of primary documents from my life (letters, report cards, class pictures, etc.) with all the sensitive information blacked out. I ask the students to create a timeline from that information, hypothesize about what happened in the gaps, and draw conclusions about the kind of person they think I am.” —Phil Logan, eighth grade social studies
“I took a picture of me playing fetch with my trusty golden retriever and sent it to each of my new students over the summer. On the back, I wrote a short note introducing myself and telling them how excited I was to have them in my class.” —James Carson, second grade
Share your favorites.
“I print out a list of my top 10 favorite novels and hand them out to my students on the first day of school. That way they get a taste of some of the literature we’ll be reading during the year and get to know a bit about me as well.” —Carla Harris, high school English
Give them a quiz.
“I give kids a fun quiz that says things like ‘Mrs. Scheuer has how many kids? Two, three, nine? Mrs. Scheuer’s favorite restuarant is: Applebees, Red Lobster, Lonnie’s Luncheonette, etc.’ They love when they get them correct.” —Karen Santucci-Scheuer, first grade
Make yourself a star.
“Every week during the year, one student is Star of the Week and they get to display a collage of their favorite things in the classroom. For the first week, I’m the star and my collage allows my students to get to know me.” —Judith Garcia, kindergarten
Let them piece it together.
“I give students a stack of primary documents from my life (letters, report cards, class pictures, etc.) with all the sensitive information blacked out. I ask the students to create a timeline from that information, hypothesize about what happened in the gaps, and draw conclusions about the kind of person they think I am.” —Phil Logan, eighth grade social studies
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